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So the question is, does this new design, class A using JFET's, overcome some of the problems mentioned by Frank.
Harry Pearson has poisoned the audiophile community that he claims to have engendered and infected it with the distilled pedagogy and petty assertiveness so pervasive and germane as to defy isolation. It is in every supposition and every evaluation any of us think, much less compose.
Now amplification devices...the only company that I'm aware of that has had a semiconductor specifically manufactured to it's design for the sole purpose of amplififying music is NAIM and that was in the last couple of years for their 555 range of products.
A valve on the other hand can be and is quite often hand made and is in some instances designed and built for a specific type of circuit or even a specific amplifier in mind. It can be specialised right down to metals, coatings, grid sizes, currents and voltages.
If we can use ultra high purity square section wire to wind transformers and mount them so vibrations are bled away, if we can hand make silver in oil capacitors the size of coke cans for tiny signals to move freely through, if we can use high wattage tantalum resistors toleranced to one or two decimal places then where is the weak link in the system?
All things being equal, if all the other components are of equal quality a valve can always be made to a higher sonic ability than a transistor.
If we have all listened to high end audio then really we all know that up to a point solid state works but that point is fixed by the sonic abilities of the transistor itself and until someone starts making hugely overengineered semiconductors in small quantities for use in high end stereo then that will, in my opinion, always be the limiting factor in solid states ability.
now, here's a decent deal on tube amps that will go to-to-toe w/hi-power s/s amps:
Quote from: JCC on 12 Apr 2009, 01:05 amSo the question is, does this new design, class A using JFET's, overcome some of the problems mentioned by Frank.JFETs are the solid state devices that have the closest physical operating characteristics to tubes. Along with Nelson Pass, Erno Borbely (who used to be in charge of design for Dynaco and worked with David Hafler) is a huge JFET fan for that reason. I've liked what JFET gear I've heard. I could live with it.
Borbely is certainly one of the top designers. I should have mentioned his kits in my list of good value high performance SS gear.
Quote from: doug s. on 12 Apr 2009, 01:21 amnow, here's a decent deal on tube amps that will go to-to-toe w/hi-power s/s amps:I am firmly convinced that VTL and Manley have not been the same since David Manley stepped out of the picture.
Yes, definitely. Plus his new DAC looks incredible. He wisely outsourced the digital stage (SRC4392, direct downsampling, 4x PCM1704, switchable non-OS, USB with optocoupler... my kind of gear) and took care of the power supplies and I/V himself... all JFET.
So now you know that I have not been 'marketed' and much more importantly you have learned something about stereo.
Hi Jake, This is a classic "Ford vs Chevy" deal. It does get ran through the mill allot. Most of the time it's not this civil. I would like to see the solid state folks get a place to nest sometime. It would be fun comparing notes between the circles.
I **did** learn a great deal and do not regret the topic being brought up at all!
I don't know what you're going through with this and hope everything's OK- but I have a feeling it isn't.
Look at all the hits! WOW!!! The definition of popular or what?
Take care.Blair